Angela Carpenter POV:
Just as my thumb hovered over the plunger of the EpiPen, a sharp sting ripped across my cheek. Christin. Her hand, fueled by a frantic, unhinged fury, had landed squarely on my face.
"Don't you dare!" she shrieked, her eyes wild. "You're trying to poison him! Get away from my son, you monster!"
Before I could react, Byron was there, his face contorted with rage. He grabbed my wrist, twisting it painfully, making me drop the EpiPen. It clattered to the marble floor, rolling out of reach.
"You evil, twisted woman!" Byron snarled, his voice thick with loathing. "You've really lost your mind, haven't you? Trying to kill a child, my child, right in front of me? How could you fall so far? My Angela, the kindest person I knew... how could you become so utterly vile?"
His words, meant to hurt, to diminish, were eerily familiar. My Angela, the kindest person I knew. He used to say that all the time. When we were engaged, when he was showering me with affection, he'd whisper, "You're so pure, Angela. So good." He had put me on a pedestal, and now he was enjoying tearing me down from it, reveling in the idea that I had become this "vile" person he imagined. He couldn't grasp that it was his betrayal that had changed me, not into something vile, but into something resilient.
The memory of his praise, once cherished, tasted like ash. He never truly knew me, not the real me, just the reflection he wanted to see. And Christin? She was just a more convenient reflection.
A frantic voice cut through the haze of my thoughts. "Someone call an ambulance! He's not breathing!" A guest, finally snapping out of their shock, pointed at the boy. His small body was starting to convulse, his face a horrifying shade of purple.
There was no time.
I lunged for the EpiPen, ignoring the pain in my wrist, ignoring Byron' s death grip. He pulled back, but I was faster. My fingers closed around the injector.
"He's going into respiratory arrest!" I yelled, my voice cracking with urgency. "He needs this now!"
Byron, still blinded by his righteous fury, reacted instinctively. He raised his foot and kicked, a deliberate, brutal strike to my side.
The impact sent me flying, slamming me against the ornate wall. Air rushed out of my lungs in a painful whoosh. My head hit the marble with a dull thud, and for a moment, everything went black, a symphony of white noise roaring in my ears.
The room reeled. I lay there, gasping for breath, pain blooming hot and sharp in my side, in my head. The faces of the guests morphed into blurry, horrified blurs. They were whispering, pointing, but their words were indistinct.
Byron, looming over me, his chest heaving, his eyes still burning with accusation, pointed a finger. "See? This is what she does! She' s trying to kill my son. She's disturbed, unstable! I warned you all!" He turned to the crowd, playing the victim, the protector. "Get her out of here! Call security! Call the police! She just assaulted me, and now she's trying to harm my child!"
Christin, still clinging to his arm, nodded vigorously, her face wet with crocodile tears. "She's always been jealous, Byron! She's getting her revenge!"
My vision slowly cleared. The child. He was still struggling, his small body twitching, his life fading. I had to get to him.
Gritting my teeth, I pushed myself up, every muscle screaming in protest. The pain in my ribs was excruciating, but it fueled my determination. "You fool!" I rasped, my voice hoarse. "You absolute, arrogant fool! If he dies, it's on your hands!"
I stumbled towards the EpiPen that had fallen closer to the boy. "This isn't poison!" I snatched it up, my hands shaking but firm. "This is epinephrine! I developed it! It's an enhanced formulation for severe anaphylaxis, still in trials, but it's the only thing that will save him!"
Christin scoffed, a venomous smile returning. "Developed by you? Don't be absurd! You're what, a glorified lab assistant? What do you know about developing drugs? And who carries experimental medication around in their purse? You're a liar! It's sabotage!"
Byron glared at me, his eyes filled with contempt. "She's right. You're losing it, Angela. You're not a doctor. You're an embarrassment. Get out. Now. Before I have you thrown out and arrested for attempted murder." He stepped between me and the child, shielding him, his "hero" complex fully engaged. "I'll handle this. I'll get him to a real doctor."
He tried to push me back, but I stood my ground, swaying slightly from the pain. "You can't handle this, Byron! He won't make it to the hospital! Every second he goes without this, his chances diminish!"
He scoffed. "Don't tell me what I can or cannot do! You're a nobody, Angela. A disgraced ex-fiancée. You don't belong here! You certainly don't belong near my family, trying to poison my son!" He took another step towards me, his hand raised as if to strike again. "Now, get out, before you make an even bigger fool of yourself and anger everyone important at this gala!"
My jaw clenched. His words were a mirror of his old self, dismissive, arrogant, and utterly blind. He thought I was still begging for his approval, still afraid of his wrath. He thought he was important.
"You think you're important, Byron?" I whispered, a chilling smile touching my lips. "You have no idea who I am anymore."
The child's breathing had almost stopped. His small chest rose and fell with terrifying slowness. His eyes, barely open, were glassy.
I pushed past Byron, ignoring his angry shout, ignoring the fresh wave of pain as my injured ribs protested. Christin shrieked again, lunging for me, but I was focused. I found the boy's thigh, pulled back the fabric of his small suit, and with a decisive movement, pressed the EpiPen firmly against his skin.
A small click. The needle deployed. The medication surged into his tiny body.
I pulled the injector away, tossing it onto the floor. Then I collapsed beside him, my own breath coming in ragged gasps, the adrenaline finally starting to wane. Exhaustion, pain, and a profound sense of relief washed over me. I had done it. I had saved him.
Angela Carpenter POV:
A gasp rippled through the onlookers. The child, who moments ago had been on the brink of death, let out a shaky, desperate cough. His small chest lifted, a full, albeit ragged, breath expanding his lungs. The purple tinge began to recede from his lips, slowly replaced by a healthier pink. His eyes fluttered open, blinking in confusion.
I slumped back against the cold marble, one hand pressed to my aching ribs, the other still resting near the boy. A wave of profound exhaustion washed over me, mingled with a quiet sense of triumph. He was going to be okay.
Byron, who had been about to physically assault me again, froze mid-action, his eyes fixed on his son. The raw fear in his eyes slowly, carefully, began to give way to bewildered relief.
Christin, however, was not so easily swayed. She knelt beside the child, her eyes darting between him and me. "Baby, are you okay? What did that woman do to you? Did she give you something bad?" Her voice was laced with a sickly sweetness, a manipulative edge I knew all too well.
The boy, still disoriented, rubbed his eyes. He looked at Christin, then at me, his young mind trying to process the chaos. "She... she gave me a shot," he whimpered, pointing a small, accusatory finger at me. "She poked me."
My heart sank. He was just a child, scared and confused. He didn't understand.
Christin seized on his words like a viper. "See, Byron? I told you! She hurt him! She poisoned him! She's trying to get back at us, trying to make us look bad!" She turned to the crowd, her voice swelling with righteous indignation. "She's a menace! She's dangerous! My poor baby!"
Murmurs erupted from the crowd. Some faces still showed confusion, but others hardened into judgment. "The boy said she poked him..." "He was fine until she came..." The tide of public opinion was turning against me.
A man, one of the gala attendees who had witnessed the initial interaction, stepped forward tentatively. "But, Mrs. Walter, the boy was choking before she did anything. And the EpiPen... it looked like it saved him."
Byron, however, was past reason. He stared at me with a chilling intensity, his face a mask of wounded pride and renewed fury. "Angela," he hissed, his voice low and vibrating with menace, "you promised me you'd wait. You promised you'd always love me. And now you come here, publicly humiliating my wife, trying to murder my son, and then you lie about being married? This is not just crazy, Angela. This is pure, unadulterated evil."
He stepped closer, his shadow falling over me. "I gave you a year, Angela. I was generous. And you repay me with this?" His eyes narrowed. "You're going to pay for this. Dearly."
Christin, seeing Byron's rage, added her own fuel to the fire. Her eyes, usually so demure, now held a glint of triumph as she glared at me. She lifted her hand and, with a sickening crack, slapped me hard across the face again.
"You pathetic, jealous harlot!" she screamed, her voice shrill with uncontrolled fury. "You can't stand that he chose me, can you? That I have his child, his life! You think you can ruin everything? You think you can destroy his career, his family, just because you couldn't keep him?" Her fingers clenched in my hair, yanking my head back. "I'll see you in jail, you witch! You tried to kill my son! My innocent little boy!"
Byron, instead of intervening, simply watched, a cold, satisfied expression on his face. He seemed to agree with every accusation.
My head swam. The physical pain from Christin's slap, Byron's kick, and my injured knee was overwhelming. But it was the bitter taste of their betrayal, their unwavering belief in my malice, that truly broke me. My vision blurred from unshed tears, but I refused to let them fall. Not for them.
Christin, her grip tight on my hair, pulled harder. "I'm calling the police!" she shrieked at the top of her lungs, her head whipping around to scan the room. "Someone call the police! This woman tried to murder my child! She's a danger to everyone!"
A ripple went through the crowd. Sirens, faint at first, then growing louder, wafted in from outside.
Suddenly, a voice cut through Christin's hysterical cries, sharp and authoritative. "Police! What's going on here?"
Two uniformed officers, guns drawn, burst into the lounge. The sight of their weapons sent a fresh wave of panic through the guests. Christin, still clinging to my hair, pointed a trembling finger at me.
"Officer! That woman! The one with the cheap dress and the desperate look! She's a crazy country girl who tried to poison my son!" she shrieked, clearly expecting the officers to immediately apprehend me. "She's probably a party crasher, a nobody from some backwoods town! Arrest her!"
The officer closest to us, a tall woman with sharp eyes, stepped forward. She looked at me, her gaze sweeping over my disheveled appearance, my torn dress, the handprints on my face, and then she paused, her eyes widening slightly.
Her partner, a stern-faced man, scanned the room, his gaze resting on the chaos, then on Christin, still clutching my hair.
The female officer slowly, deliberately, lowered her weapon. She looked at Christin, then back at me. Her eyes held a flicker of recognition, then something else. Respect.
"Dr. Carpenter?" she said, her voice filled with surprise. "Is that you?"
Christin's face contorted in confusion. "Carpenter? She's nobody! Arrest her!"
The officer ignored Christin. She looked directly at me, then at Byron and Christin. Her eyes narrowed. "Byron Osborn, Christin Walter, you are both under arrest."
My head snapped up, my gaze locking with the officer's. What was happening?
The male officer stepped forward, his gun now pointed directly at Byron, then at Christin, who still had my hair in her grasp. "Let her go, Mrs. Walter. Slowly." His voice was calm, but deadly serious. "You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law."
Angela Carpenter POV:
The world went silent. The clinking of glasses, the hushed whispers, even Christin' s hysterical sobs, all seemed to cease. The only sound was the faint hum of the air conditioning and the pounding of my own heart against my ribs. Byron and Christin' s faces were a ghastly white, their eyes wide with disbelief, then dawning horror.
The female officer, her expression now stern and unwavering, gently but firmly took my arm, helping me to my feet. "Are you alright, Dr. Carpenter?" Her voice was solicitous, a stark contrast to the accusations that had just been hurled at me.
Byron, still reeling, pushed past Christin. "What is the meaning of this? Arrest? Are you insane? This woman is a menace! She attacked my wife, she tried to poison my son! I demand you arrest her!" He pointed a trembling finger at me, his arrogance returning in full force despite the circumstances. "And who is this 'Dr. Carpenter'? She's Angela, my ex-fiancée, a nobody who can't let go! She's masquerading as someone important!"
He took a step towards me, his eyes blazing with a familiar fury. "You think you can play games with me, Angela? Impersonating a doctor? This is a serious offense! You'll go to jail for this! You'll face consequences you can't even imagine!"
I stared at him, my eyes narrowed. The audacity. The sheer, unadulterated arrogance. He was still trying to control me, to dictate my reality. My hand, still stinging from Christin's slap, flew up. Smack! The sound echoed through the stunned silence as my palm connected with his other cheek.
His head snapped sideways, a red welp blooming on his skin. He stumbled back, his eyes wide with shock, his mouth agape.
"Consequences?" I said, my voice dangerously soft, but clear. "You dare to speak of consequences to me? You stand here, after leaving me bleeding at the altar, after trying to physically assault me, after allowing your wife to attack me and accuse me of murder, and you have the gall to threaten me?" My chest heaved with a sudden, fierce anger, cold and precise. "You are the one who needs to face consequences, Byron. Not me."
He clutched his cheek, his eyes still wide with disbelief. "Angela... what has gotten into you? This isn't you! We were meant to be! I told you to wait! I was coming back for you!" He stammered, his facade finally cracking, showing a flicker of desperation, a desperate attempt to cling to the past he' d so carelessly discarded.
A bitter laugh escaped my lips. "Coming back for me? Is that what you call it? After five years of silence, after building a life for myself, after realizing the colossal mistake I almost made?" I shook my head, a profound weariness settling over me. "Byron, I am married. Happily married. To a man who knows my worth, who respects my mind, and who would never, ever abandon me for a lie."
I looked at the female officer, then back at Byron. "And as for 'Dr. Carpenter'? Yes, that's me. Dr. Angela Carpenter, research immunologist. The one who just saved your son's life, despite your best efforts to stop me."
Just then, a young man, barely out of his twenties, with thick-rimmed glasses and a lab coat, pushed through the crowd, his eyes scanning the scene with alarm. When he saw me, his face crumpled with concern.
"Dr. Carpenter! Are you alright? What happened? I heard the commotion." He rushed to my side, his gaze sweeping over my disheveled state, the redness on my cheek. "Are you hurt?"
Byron, watching this exchange, scoffed. He seemed to recover his bluster. "Oh, I see. So this is the 'husband,' is it? Some scrawny lab boy? You traded me, Byron Osborn, for him?" He laughed, a harsh, dismissive sound. "What a downgrade, Angela. I expected better. You always had such refined taste." He looked at the young man, his eyes full of contempt. "Do you even make enough to afford her dry cleaning?"
My hand flew up again, but before I could deliver another blow, a wave of profound sorrow washed over me, eclipsing the anger. He was truly pathetic. Completely, utterly blind.
"Don't you dare," I said, my voice trembling, not with fear, but with the effort to control the storm within me. "Don't you dare insult my student. Don't you dare insult his brilliance, his dedication, his character. All things you wouldn't recognize if they stared you in the face."
Byron, however, was undeterred. "Student? Please. You probably just picked him up off the street. Still playing the savior, aren't you, Angela? Just like you tried to play the martyr at our wedding." His cruel words cut deep, dredging up memories I had tried to bury. "Remember your little suicide attempt, Angela? The drama? The tears? You always were so manipulative."
The words hit me like a physical blow, stealing my breath. My wrist, the faint scars, throbbed with phantom pain. He was talking about the most vulnerable moment of my life, twisting it, weaponizing it.
"You speak of manipulation?" I whispered, my voice hoarse. "You, who promised me everything, who stood before God and our families, and then walked away with my sister, claiming a 'moral duty' because she was 'pregnant' with a child due to a 'stalker meant for you'? You, who then told me to 'wait a year' while you played house with her? And then, when I was broken and desperate, you called me manipulative for bleeding at your feet?" My voice rose, raw with years of suppressed pain. "My father, Byron, my dying father, made me promise to be happy, to find love. And you were my happiness. You were my love. And you shattered it. You broke me into a million pieces and then blamed me for the mess."
"You have no right," I continued, my voice now a steady, steel-edged blade, "no right to judge me, no right to speak of my past, no right to stand here and demand anything from me. You lost that right the moment you chose Christin. And you lost it again just now, by kicking me, by letting her hit me, by accusing me of murder."
Byron opened his mouth to retort, but before he could utter another word, a calm, authoritative voice, full of quiet power, cut through the din.
"That's enough."
The voice resonated with a quiet authority that silenced everyone, even the officers. I turned, my eyes widening. Standing there, tall and imposing, his eyes burning with a fierce, protective fire, was Elias Morin. My husband.